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  1. What Is a Database? - Oracle

    Nov 24, 2020 · A database is an organized collection of structured information, or data, typically stored electronically in a computer system. Databases range from relational to cloud databases.

  2. What Is a Database? | Oracle APAC

    Nov 24, 2020 · A database is an organized collection of structured information, or data, typically stored electronically in a computer system. Databases range from relational to cloud databases.

  3. MySQL Workbench - Oracle

    10.2.2 Migrating from Supported Databases 10.2.3 Migrating from Unsupported (Generic) Databases 10.3 Conceptual DBMS Equivalents 10.4 Microsoft Access Migration 10.5 Microsoft SQL Server …

  4. Patching for Oracle Databases

    Jun 11, 2025 · Once Vulnerability Detection identifies unpatched vulnerabilities, Patching offers a hassle free one click transition from Vulnerability Detection to Patching, allowing you to remediate …

  5. What Is a Vector Database? - Oracle

    Vector databases can be categorized into various types, either by storage structure, such as columnar, or classified based on their implementation, such as in-memory databases.

  6. Managing Pluggable Databases Using Enterprise Manager

    Access from Databases, then select Administration drop down menu and click Database Provisioning. In the Database Provisioning page, in the Related Links section of the left menu pane, click Provision …

  7. Database Documentation - Oracle Help Center

    Other Databases The world's most popular open-source database, MySQL, as well as innovative In-Memory and NoSQL database solutions

  8. Why Vector Databases Are Here to Stay in the AI Age

    Feb 12, 2025 · Learn why vector databases, and particularly multimodel databases, have become such a popular component of AI-driven architectures.

  9. What Is a Graph Database? - Oracle

    Graph databases are an extremely flexible, extremely powerful tool. Because of the graph format, complex relationships can be determined for deeper insights with much less effort.

  10. This unification not only eliminates the need for multiple specialized databases but also reduces data movement costs, minimizes security and privacy risks through unified access controls, and simplifies …